Ad Familiares 9.22
Ad Familiares 9.22
Headnote
Cicero to L. Papirius Paetus, written probably at the Tusculan villa in June or July of 45 BC — Perseus dateline Scr. fort. in Tusculano m. Iun. aut Quint. a. 709 (45), month-precision uncertain between the two. Provoked, evidently, by a freely worded letter of Paetus that used a bawdy term without apology, Cicero responds with a mock-Stoic disquisition, in five sections, on whether obscenity inheres in the word or in the thing it names. The structure is a small Academic exercise: expound Zeno’s thesis, marshal counter-examples from comedy and tragedy, work the conclusion through pairs of words for the same object, then end with a Stoic tag and a comic concession. The closing date-pun — honorem igitur K. Martiis — treats the Kalends of March as something one must be polite to, just as one is polite to the obscene words.
The voice is the late Paetus voice: high learning poured into low diction, mock-formal philosophising about latrine matters, the sage and the bath both invoked in a single paragraph. One Greek phrase closes the argument: ho sophos euthyrr\=emon\=esei, “the wise man will speak straight-forwardly,” a Stoic technical formula on free speech (parrh\=esia). Cruxes: libertatem loquendi I take as “freedom of speech,” the technical Stoic parrh\=esia that Paetus has just exhibited. The fragmentary stage quotations — one from Naevius’s Demiurgus, one a song associated with Roscius, several unattributed — I render closely enough for the punch-lines to land without footnotes; the point each time is that the matter is more brazen than the wording. The famous catalogue of false or shifting obscenities (penis, anus, bini, mentula, divisio, intercapedo, batuit, depsit, testes, colei) I have left the Latin tags in place where the joke turns on the Latin word, with the gloss inline, since a fully Englished version would lose the linguistic point of the letter. Suppedit I have construed in the sense “pisses under (himself)” that the bath-contrast requires; others (Shackleton Bailey) take it of farting and emend, but the manuscript reading works once the comic shape is admitted.